4.7 Article

Energy-Aware Dual-Path Geographic Routing to Bypass Routing Holes in Wireless Sensor Networks

Journal

IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON MOBILE COMPUTING
Volume 17, Issue 6, Pages 1339-1352

Publisher

IEEE COMPUTER SOC
DOI: 10.1109/TMC.2017.2771424

Keywords

Wireless sensor networks; geographic routing; energy-aware routing; anchor list; routing hole

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [61402343, 61672318, U1504614, 61631013, 61303241]
  2. National Key Research and Development Program [2016YFB1000102]
  3. Natural Science Foundation of Suzhou/Jiangsu Province [BK20160385]
  4. EU FP7 QUICK Project [PIRSES-GA-2013-612652]
  5. projects of the Tsinghua National Laboratory for Information Science and Technology (TNList)

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Geographic routing has been considered as an attractive approach for resource-constrained wireless sensor networks (WSNs) since it exploits local location information instead of global topology information to route data. However, this routing approach often suffers from the routing hole (i.e., an area free of nodes in the direction closer to destination) in various environments such as buildings and obstacles during data delivery, resulting in route failure. Currently, existing geographic routing protocols tend to walk along only one side of the routing holes to recover the route, thus achieving suboptimal network performance such as longer delivery delay and lower delivery ratio. Furthermore, these protocols cannot guarantee that all packets are delivered in an energy-efficient manner once encountering routing holes. In this paper, we focus on addressing these issues and propose an energy-aware dual-path geographic routing (EDGR) protocol for better route recovery from routing holes. EDGR adaptively utilizes the location information, residual energy, and the characteristics of energy consumption to make routing decisions, and dynamically exploits two node-disjoint anchor lists, passing through two sides of the routing holes, to shift routing path for load balance. Moreover, we extend EDGR into three-dimensional (3D) sensor networks to provide energy-aware routing for routing hole detour. Simulation results demonstrate that EDGR exhibits higher energy efficiency, and has moderate performance improvements on network lifetime, packet delivery ratio, and delivery delay, compared to other geographic routing protocols in WSNs over a variety of communication scenarios passing through routing holes. The proposed EDGR is much applicable to resource-constrained WSNs with routing holes.

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